Geography

Côte d'Ivoire (also known as the Ivory
Coast), in western Africa on the Gulf of Guinea, is a little larger than
New Mexico. Its neighbors are Liberia, Guinea, Mali, Burkina Faso, and
Ghana. The country consists of a coastal strip in the south, dense forests
in the interior, and savannas in the north.

Government

Republic.

History

Côte d'Ivoire was originally made up of
numerous isolated settlements; today it represents more than sixty
distinct tribes, including the Baoule, Bete, Senoufou, Agni, Malinke, Dan,
and Lobi. Côte d'Ivoire attracted both French and Portuguese
merchants in the 15th century who were in search of ivory and slaves.
French traders set up establishments early in the 19th century, and in
1842, the French obtained territorial concessions from local tribes,
gradually extending their influence along the coast and inland. The area
was organized as a territory in 1893, became an autonomous republic in the
French Union after World War II, and achieved independence on Aug. 7,
1960. Côte d'Ivoire formed a customs union in 1959 with Dahomey
(Benin), Niger, and Burkina Faso. The nation's economy is one of the most
developed in sub-Saharan Africa. It is the world's largest exporter of
cocoa and one of the largest exporters of coffee.

From independence until his death in 1993, Felix
Houphouët-Boigny served as president. Massive protests by students,
farmers, and professionals forced the president to legalize opposition
parties and hold the first contested presidential election in Oct. 1990,
which Houphouët-Boigny won with 81% of the vote.

Beginning in Sept. 1998, thousands of
demonstrators protested a constitutional revision that granted President
Henri Konan Bédié greatly enhanced powers.
Bédié also promoted the concept of ivoirité,
which, roughly translated, means “pure Ivoirian pride.”
Although its defenders describe ivoirité as a term of
positive national pride, it has led to dangerous xenophobia, with numerous
ethnic Malians and Burkinans driven out of the country in 1999.

President Bédié was overthrown in
the country's first military coup in Dec. 1999, and Gen. Robert Guei
assumed control of the country. As a result, the majority of foreign aid
to the country ceased.

Voters Approve a Draft Constitution

In what were seen as the first steps toward
reasserting democracy, voters overwhelmingly approved a draft constitution
in July 2000. However, the document permitted only those of “pure
Ivoirian” stock to run for president, thereby excluding nearly 40%
of the population. Guei, who had promised to stay in power only to
“sweep the house clean,” instead decided to run for president
in Oct. 2000 elections. Gen. Guei ran against a civilian opposition
candidate, Laurent Gbagbo. Each declared victory in an election most
believe to have been rife with fraud. Popular outcry against Guei soon
turned violent, forcing him to leave the country, and Gbagbo assumed the
presidency. Many observers questioned his mandate, however, since the
popular opposition leader Alassane Ouattara had been excluded from the
election on the specious grounds that he was not a pure-blooded Ivoirian.
It was not until June 2002 that Ouattara was finally granted full Ivoirian
citizenship, allowing him to run for president. Hundreds have died in
violence sparked by the dispute.

Mutineering soldiers attempted a coup on Sept.
19, 2002. Guei and Interior Minister Doudou were killed in fighting
between government soldiers and the rebels. President Gbagbo accused Guei
of staging the coup. Fighting continued, even after a French-brokered
peace accord was signed on Jan. 25, 2003, calling for the government to
share power with the rebels. President Gbagbo's supporters found such a
plan unacceptable, and there was rioting in the capital. The war was
finally declared officially over in July. The peace, supported by 4,000
UN-sponsored French peacekeeping troops, was fragile, however.
Pro-government and rebel militias remained armed, and in 2004, Northern
and Muslim rebels still controlled half the country.

In Nov. 2004, the civil war again erupted; in
May 2005, another peace deal was signed, but no militias disarmed.
Elections were scheduled for October 2005, but the UN declared this
impossible under the continued fighting. To avert a constitutional crisis,
the UN Security Council recommended the president remain in office another
year, but that he turn over most of his power to a new transitional prime
minister. African mediators selected Charles Konan Banny, governor of West
Africa's central bank, as a candidate acceptable to all sides of the
conflict.

Power-Sharing Agreement Brings Hope for an End to the Civil War

Another peace accord between the government and
the rebels was signed in March 2007. The two sides agreed to set up a
power-sharing government and establish a joint army. Observers were
cautiously optimistic that this deal would finally end the civil war. In
April, rebel leader Guillaume Soro—President Gbagbo's bitter
rival—was sworn in as prime minister, and a new government was
formed.

Gbagbo Refuses to Accept Election Results

After several postponements by President Gbagbo, Côte d'Ivoire held its first presidential election in ten years in Oct. 2010. The first round of voting between incumbent Gbagbo and his historic rival Alassane Ouattara, a former IMF official who was excluded from the presidential 2000 race because he was not a pure-blooded Ivoirian, was inconclusive. In the second round, Ouattara defeated Gbagbo 54.1% to 45.9%. Gbagbo, however, refused to accept the results or step down, leaving the country on the brink of civil war. The African Union, UN, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), U.S., and the EU all endorsed the results. ECOWAS officials have tried in vain to negotiate a solution to the impasse.

For several months following the November election, Gbagbo's security forces attacked and killed citizens in Abidjan and other areas. Ouattara took refuge in a hotel near the presidential palace under the protection of UN troops, and was not able to assume a leadership position. Militias from the north loyal to Ouattara, however, began battling Gbagbo's forces, bringing the country to the brink of a civil war. The violence against citizens by Gbagbo's forces peaked in March 2011, prompting Human Rights Watch to say the attacks amounted to crimes against humanity. Ouattara's militias persisted, and by April had taken control of much of the country. As the stalemate continued and civilian deaths mounted, France and the UN intervened militarily. Troops blockaded the presidential palace, and Gbagbo, who had been holed up in the basement of the presidential palace, stubbornly refused to surrender for a week before finally being apprehended. He was turned over to the International Criminal Court at The Hague in Nov. 2011, where he will face charges of crimes against humanity.

Gbagbo hails from the south of the country and supports the concept of ivoirité, which means “pure Ivoirian pride.” Ouattara is from the Muslim north, which has been at odds with the government-controlled south since the 2002 civil war began.

In Nov. 2012, President Alassane Ouattara dissolved the government of Prime Minister Jeannot Kouadio-Ahoussou and Foreign Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan was named the new prime minister. In the new cabinet, Duncan will also act as finance minister, while Charles Koffi Diby became foreign minister; Ouattara remained as defense minister, and Hamed Bakayoko interior minister.